Wednesday 8 December 2010

Mistletoe - WIP 8


Have finished the male character now, going to move onto colouring the female character next! :-)

Monday 6 December 2010

Sunday 5 December 2010

Mistletoe - WIP 6


Now you can see I've added the final lighting effects and also the fire! I need to add the christmas decor and the background will be finished. I will be hiding the lighting effects whilst I paint the characters, though, and just showing them on the final result. I'm really liking how this is turning out already... :-)

I think to date I've spent 7 hours on this piece so far.

Mistletoe - WIP 4 & 5



Ok, at the top is WIP 4! I've painted in most of the background now (just need to add a cosy fire to that fireplace and some Christmas decorations!).

The bottom picture, WIP5, shows how I've changed the colour scheme. I like this one more, its warmer and more appealing so I will stick with this one for now, methinks.

Saturday 4 December 2010

Mistletoe - Flat Colours


Flat colours for the commission I'm working on. Next, for the background. :-)

Mistletoe - Sketch

This is (hopefully) the final sketch for the commission I submitted concepts for yesterday. I really like this! God bless Posemaniacs.com though, that site is great for pose stock to help with anatomy! I'm having a lot of fun on this piece so far!

Subject to the commissioners approval I can start painting this up. I'm really looking forward to it!

Friday 3 December 2010

Mistletoe - Concepts

Some concepts for a commission.. :-)

Ok so, Concept 1 (top) is meant to be the two characters laying down (on a bed?) with the male dangling some mistletoe! I thought maybe they could also be laying ona rug with a fire in the background, or a window to a snowy scene, etc etc.

Concept 2 (bottom left) is meant to be the characters snuggled up in bed.

Concept 3 (bottom right) could be a more easily adapted scene in terms of location. Indoors, next to a roaring fire? On a snowy hill? (etc etc)

Saturday 20 November 2010

Field of Lilies Redo WIP 9


Took the afternoon off to draw today - its been bliss!

This is a personal project that I havent had time to work on for so long... Its finally taking shape. Think I may share my new custom grass brush on my website at some point when I have time to compile a ZIP file to upload with instructions :) The lilies were fun to do :D

Havent finished the background yet, but have run out of time for now! Can't wait to get back to this.. :-)

Wednesday 17 November 2010

Revision is chasing me - send help!

Exams are taking over my life - apologies for my absence.... - freedom approaches on December 2nd!!!

Sunday 31 October 2010

Art Clay Exploits: Part 3

Polishing, firing & Finishing: a.k.a. Ultimate Disaster Occurs!

After leaving my piece to dry from Friday night until Saturday afternoon, with a couple of bursts of the hairdryer too for help, I sanded down my piece, using a simple nail file. I was able to easily remove most of the imperfections and lumps and bumps - I spent a few hours on this section; picking it up, doing a few minutes until it looked "fine", then leaving it for a while, coming back to it, seeing all the new imperfections I hadnt noticed, refiling it... rinse and repeat. Like you would with an art piece, leave it and return several times, and hold it at arms length, honestly criticising it to try and make the best of your piece. :-)

To make sure it was truly dry I did not fire it until Sunday afternoon.



I fired my piece on my gas hob. As such, I purchased this handy metal net to rest my piece over the hob on. The smaller finer piece, is cut specially so you may bend it into a box shape (shown a few steps below), which means that if, for whatever reason your piece spits, or explodes (etc) its contained.


I filled a stainless steel bowl with some water to finish off cooling the piece (I dont know how important the stainless steel part is really, my instruction sheet specified it, so seeing as we had some in the cupboard I used it.... might try it without though).


Timing is important - I took off my watch so I could observe the time easier. I fired for a total of five minutes.


I switched on the hob, to find the hottest part of the steel net (which part glowed red), picked a red spot to put my piece on, then turned off the hob so I could safely lay my piece on it, with a pair of cheap tweezers I bought from Tescos the other day for the purpose. Very handy!


I laid on my piece, formed the little box from the smaller steel mesh as shown about and placed it over the piece, lighting the hob again after. Now, there are two things to note here; firstly, my piece looked rather unremarkable for the whole firing. No burning, spitting, glowing.... absolutely zilch. Did I do it right? Who knows. The piece shrunk by the recommended 10% so.. I can only hope so!

Secondly to note; the smell. Oh my god the smell. THE SMELL WAS HORRENDOUS...... Now, as it turns out this was *not* the fault of the silver clay, but rather the mother of pearl setting.. which as you can see below.... does not have a very high tolerance of temperature.


That is to say, it was totally, utterly destroyed. Such a shame.. Lucky that it was a cheap gem to buy, but its still a sad shame. It was so so beautiful. :-( Needless to say, that was unsalvageable. As you can also see, the silver shrunk so much it cracked noticeably. I'm not sure how to get around that..?? Maybe you have to use it in much thicker quaitities (I shall certainly try that..) to avoid this. So, a disaster all round, really.


Then one of the leaves fell off. Oh bother, was that the final straw! After leaving it to cool for the recommended 15 minutes, I dunked it in the bowl of water, and dried it off, before setting about to see if I could salvage it.

Well beyond repair.

Um.... really... REALLY... beyond repair. The shattering of the mother of pearl was actually quite pretty (the internal layers had retained normal pearlescent sheens) but unfortunately not suitable for me to use anymore...


Firstly, I took off the mother of pearl (it came away easily), and chipped away the raised border I had creates, as totally as I could.


Using the magical polishing cloth I bought, and also the steel toothbrush too, I furiously scrubbed and rubbed until my piece polished up (this is the front, you can see the remains of the border...). The nice matte silver finish was quite pretty (but I do wonder how to get it truly shiny..).

You can also see two fracture lines: as the piece was, let face it, ruined, I decided to test the strength of my piece. Disappointingly, it snapped under very little pressure from my hands, very brittle and fragile (again, must make thicker next time..). Glued it back together - bless super glue! It was to become my good friend during this most hard of rescue missions!! I actually quite like the fracture lines, nice addition of character...


This was the back of the piece, polished. Scrubbed up quite nice actually, very smooth finish. Quite liked this.


In the end, I cut a piece of copper sheet the same size and shape as the mother of pearl, and super glued it in place on the front of the cabochon. This became a two sided piece; this was the back, where I reattached the leaves. Simple, but nice, I think.

I didnt want to leave the front to be a mess though! I also couldnt leave it bare with just he copper sheet on it, as the remains of the border were quite ugly. So, I got out my super huge beading kit, and rifled through it to find something suitable to add on. In the end I went for small turquoise chips (again, glued on).

Overall I think the final pendant is *ok*, but obviously compared to the initial ambition, concept and ideas I had, its nothing in comparison. A disappointment really, but I'm glad I was able to salvage it to soemthing unique and useable (especially since theres about £7 of pure 99.9% silver in the piece....).

Overall, with regards the silver clay, there is obviously a LOT of room for improvement. I'm viewing this experience with mixed emotions.

On the one hand; I failed at something I experimented in, in essence. That incenses me to try harder, and succeed. I do not like to be beaten!! This is a puzzle I will endeavour to solve - at least until I run out of silverclay to work with!

On the other hand; this material is a veritable NIGHTMARE to work with, no shadow of a lie. This may be partly down to my own inexperience, but let face it, when the apparent *slow dry* clay seems to be totally dry within a minute or two of removing from the pack, and the *normal* (i.e. faster) dry clay seems like it will never flipping dry, theres some head scratching and panic on my part! I have learned the hard way never to fire stones/gems - you may lose them (and they may stink out your house in the process...). Don't do it kids, just don't do it!

In conclusion though, would I do it again? Definitely. Like I said, I don't like to be beaten! Its an intruiging material to work with, for sure. Give it a try if you can, but be prepared to lose your money if and when it goes wrong.. then again, maybe just don't make the mistakes I did! ;-)

Kind regards from a beginner,

Let me know how it goes,

Meg!

Friday 29 October 2010

Silver Clay Exploits: Part 2

Design & Sculpting

Ok, this is the part where I did the bulk of the making of the piece, which for reference took about 45 mins. Firstly, I produced quite a few sketches, see below, and ended up choosing the one on the far right (drawn to size) as it had a more simplistic design. I was, in the end very glad I had chosen a more simple design, as I was quite overfaced by getting used to the clay. After making my first piece with this material I can safely say don't jump in on the deep end with this material, not least because it takes time getting used to, but also because its too expensive to waste!!



Ok, so, sketches done, I got a handy bit of tracing paper, and traced out the outside of the shape, drew where I would put a hole (so I could put in a bail to hang it from a chain), and also drew where the gem would sit on the centre of design - for this design I picked a 25mm x 18mm Mother of Pearl cabochon (cabochon = a flat backed gem, so its easier to mount). I cut out this design for later.


Here's what the silver clay looks like in person.. not very silver! For this piece, I used about a fifth of this teeny lump, I would estimate, maybe a tiny bit more.


Here's where the tracing paper came in very handy. Firstly, I rolled my lump of clay into a little ball. I put that inbetween two sheets of baking paper (so it wouldnt stick to my roller), and rolled it out quite thinly. I would estimate that the thickness of this base is about 0.75 - 1.00 mm thick. I don't know how good or bad that is as a thickness - I will find out upon firing!

After rolling, I put my cut out tracing paper on top of the shape and cut around it using a sharp scalpel blade to get the basic shape. I tried to be careful but it isnt very neat at this point. As you can see from the very small ball, this amount of clay was only just able to make my shape (it really doesn't go far...).


In this piece, I thought it would be nice if, from the back of the piece you could see through to the stone, so as you can see I cut out a leaf shape from the rolled out silver to make a little window.

I think its important to note at this point I was finding the material quite hard to work with! The clay I purchased was Slow Dry clay but, to be honest this dried out immensely quickly. I could honestly do very little with it at all and it was so so hard to work with once it had dried. I suppose I could have added some water though to see if that helped. Note to self, I'll try that next time! As such I decided to simplify my design further on this piece (rather that than ruin it at this stage!). I made the cutout piece, and the spare blob from the last step into small leaf shapes.

I also purchased some silver clay in a syringe (which they advertise as very helpful for making patterns and such). It was, but I found it a really really hard material to work with. Oddly, this was not slow dry clay in the syringe, and seemed to be much wetter and stickier than the slow dry clay. This seemed VERY backwards to me!!! So yes, the syringe clay was a nightmare to work with. It was immensely sticky, and blobby, and I found that it came out of the syringe in a far thicker blob than I would have liked.

There aren't any photos of this stage cause I was too busy getting covered in clay and having a nightmare!

I placed the stone in the middle of the design, and dragged the syringe around the stone to form a border (shown below) which would hold the stone in place. It came out very irregularly, but, seeing as the clay was too unpredictable and unhelpful to work with, being this wet and sticky, I felt I had to leave it a few minutes, then returned to it, and began smoothing out the border around the stone into some sort of consistent flow. I also sat the two little leaf shapes onto the border (where the stickyness of the stuff proved helpful as it cemented the leaves onto the piece)


As you can see it looks kinda messy. I smoothed it out as best I could to say the syringe clay was basically like paste and left it to dry.


This is a shot of the same step from above. The mother of pearl has a really pretty sheen to it :)

Thats all for now but stay tuned! Next time, I'll be filing & refining the dried design and.. gulp... firing it!

Silver Clay Exploits: Part 1

Internet Shopping

So, I excitedly ordered myself some silver clay from the internet, and couldn't wait to begin my experimentations into creating wonderful works! I have seen some stunning metal clay works on DeviantART, and wow oh wow, do I want in on that! I've always wanted to work with metal and heat and never realised that metal clays even existed!


Now, this is my first try with metal clay, and since I'm not sure what its like, and whether I'll truly enjoy it, I bought the minimum amount of things I could, really, my logic being that I should spend a lot of money on something I will never do again.

So, for the sum of £63.50 I purchased the following:
1. 1 x Gas Hob Firing Mesh - With Cover £6.95
2. 1 x Art Clay Silver 650 Slow Dry Clay - 20gm £28.50
3. 1 x Art Clay Silver 650 Syringe - 1 tip - 10gm £19.95
4. 1 x 3M Polishing Paper - Blue - 9 Micron £1.20
5. 1 x Modelling Knife £2.95
6. 1 x Stainless Steel Brush - Long Bristles £3.95

The artclay itself was by far the most expensive, surprisingly so, but, upon receiving my package in the post, my initital thoughts were overwhelming disappointment.... As you can see below, yes I have an array of new tools to use (which will complement my super sculpey tools from my polymer clay work) which will be very useful but, the silver was very disappointing.

As you can see in the picture below, which shows the 20g portion of silver clay next to my thumb, the portion of silver you get is absolutely miniscule.... It made me very worried to think that I might not be able to get much out of it in terms of seperate pieces (and also quite upset at the need to have to spent *so* much money to get so little!) . But, I will endeavour to make the most economic use of it that I can and see how far I can stretch it!



That's all for now, but stay tuned! Next time, I'll be finalising my designs and delving into my silver clay...!

Monday 25 October 2010

My Photo Got Featured on the Telly!


This is so exciting haha! :D My photo, that I took last night (can be found here, clicky clicky!) was featured minutes ago on Look North, the local news program! Wooooooow its so exciting! Hehe! :D

Friday 22 October 2010

Cross Tattoo


This is hopefully the final concept. I really like this, hope John does too.

I really love doing tattoo designs :D

Sunday 17 October 2010

Cross Tattoo WIP 1


A tattoo design for my boyfriends uncle, to commemorate his late wife. Having fun on this one, getting very into the design. Hope he likes it so far :) Enjoy!

Saturday 9 October 2010

Elvynne Gift - Final Piece

Its finally done! Been a long time in the making, but I haven't touched this for ages too (since March according to the last WIP on this blog!!).. That makes me feel guilty!! But better late than never..

I hope Elvynne likes this.. :-)

Wednesday 29 September 2010

Remember Jane - Final Piece


This is my entry to Think Pink V : Digital Painting-Airbrushing/Drawing Category.

Its finally done.. :) This is a painting of the late Jane Tomlinson. I thought it was particularly apt as Think Pink is all about raising awareness of breast cancer, and Jane Tomlinson was a two time sufferer of the disease. Beating it once, she never let the second diagnosis stop her living her life. She tirelessly fundraised completing many sporting events that most people would deem impossible to complete perhaps even if they didnt have cancer. Jane passed away in September 2007, 3 years ago now, but her memory and legacy live on. Remember Jane.

More about Jane:
http://www.janetomlinsonappeal.com/about/jane/index.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Tomlinson

I thought rather than stick to the pink side of Think Pink, I would try for something more thought provoking and real than a pretty girl in a pink dress, or a rose (etc etc). So, I hope I managed that. I hope my painting makes you think and empathise about not only a real person suffering from something like this, but also the inspiring side this can bring out in someone.

This took about 7 hours to paint, and I really enjoyed producing this. Digital portraits are even more fun to do that pencil ones.. :) It would be really great to do well in the Think Pink competition, from an arty side of things. Its a big deal and I've strived really hard on this to capture the theme, and of course Jane. I put so much more effort into this than any other painting I've done; down to the details of lines and distinguishing marks on her skin to getting the eyebrows down to the hair and the eyes just so... But I suppose if I don't do well but raise awareness of Think Pink and its aim to raise awareness of breat cancer then I've had some success :)


...I don't think there's anything left to say but please wish me luck and enjoy!


Meg

Reference picture: http://www.life.com/image/50917597
Works in progress:

1 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-1.html

2 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-2.html

3 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-3.html
4 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-4.html
5 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-5.html
6 - http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/remember-jane-wip-6.html

Remember Jane WIP 6


Another half an hour on lunch today - spent painting the hair strand by strand... painstaking but hopefully worth it!

Monday 27 September 2010

Remember Jane WIP 5


WIP 5, just a quick fifteen minutes on this at lunch today. Have neatened up the fleece but still have to texture it.

Saturday 25 September 2010

Remember Jane WIP 4


WIP 4... spent another hour on this now. Face, for now at least is done (I will most likely come back to it and tweak some bits on finalisation). I will next be moving onto the fleece or her hair. I'm really happy with this so far.. Glad the teeth are out of the way too! :)

Enjoy!

Thursday 23 September 2010

Remember Jane WIP 3


WIP 3 of Remember Jane... I spent another half an hour on this today at lunch, you can see the skin is coming together now (though I still need to texture it). All I can say at the moment though is I... hate.... teeth! They are really hard to draw!! Gotta keep working on those, they are so NOT finished...

Tuesday 21 September 2010

Remember Jane WIP 2


Spent another hour and a half on this just now! I'm happy with how its turning out :) I firsly refined the ear and the left eye yesterday on my lunchbreak and now have done the right eye, and started to build up and blend all the skin. Obviously a long way to go on this one but its going in the right direction I feel! Gosh I love painting skin, it has so many colours in it! :D (Though texturing it for all the pores is not so fun haha)

Sunday 19 September 2010

Remember Jane WIP 1


I'm entering the famour Think Pink V contest this year over on DeviantART (deadline on October 3rd so plenty of time left if you want to enter!), and as the contest is all about raising awareness of breast cancer I thought who better to depict than Jane Tomlinson, a wonderful woman who survived multiple bouts of cancer and who never gave up. She raised millions for charity by doing all sorts of physical challenged, never letting the disease beat her, and really shot the disease into a higher profile within the UK. She was an admirable woman who sadly died a couple of years ago.

I hope I can do her justice in this piece. This is the first WIP - rough colours and shades, all to be refined. Running at about 2 hours so far.

Enjoy, and remember Jane.

Sunday 5 September 2010

Portrait Commission - Final


Subject to clients approval this is the final version of the commiission. I am actually pretty happy with it, and it was a lovely piece to draw :-)

Friday 3 September 2010

Meg's First Cake! - The Finished Thing!

Today, I made my very first cake! How exciting :D

I made it to the basic recipe of a Victoria sponge, but for the decoration I made it up myself so I'm so so happy with how it came out! Tomorrow is when it will be tasted properly (We've had the offcuts and it was very nice but havent tried the proper finished cake yet!) so I can only hope it tastes as nice as it looks :D

There are obviously some rough patches - this is a first attempt so far from perfect! but gosh, so fun! Very tiring though, it took me an hour to prep and cook this, and TWO WHOLE HOURS to decorate it! So tired right now haha!.

Let me know what you think!

You can find all the progress shots and steps here: http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/megs-first-cake-works-in-progress-d.html





Meg's First Cake! Works in Progress :D

Today, I made my very first cake! How exciting :D

I made it to the basic recipe of a Victoria sponge, but for the decoration I made it up myself so I'm so so happy with how it came out! Tomorrow is when it will be tasted properly (We've had the offcuts and it was very nice but havent tried the proper finished cake yet!) so I can only hope it tastes as nice as it looks :D

There are obviously some rough patches - this is a first attempt so far from perfect! but gosh, so fun! Very tiring though, it took me an hour to prep and cook this, and TWO WHOLE HOURS to decorate it! So tired right now haha!.

Enjoy!

You can see the final thing here: http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/megs-first-cake-finished-thing.html


Cake is in the oven! :D


Cakes out of the oven! Looking VERY delicious and edible (and I can vouch for it smelling divine too!), but a little on the uneven side!


So I evened it out with the bread knife... :-)

I prepper some buttercream (1 part margerine to 2 parts icing sugar) which tasted very nice when I tried it! ;-)

I sliced the cake in two to prepare it for filling.

Here's the filling! Lightly heated some jam to make it spread better, and put one filling on each layer.

Here's how I prepared the lilies. Cut a heart shape for the petal (its the top of the heart that you "seal" up), and a small ball for the centre. I coloured the ball with yellow food colouring (brushed on and smushed in by my own fair hand. It got a bit sticky so I had to add extra dustings of icing sugar :D )

The finished decorations! I added food colouring to the bow in the same way as the lilies. The lilies look very pretty but I know I can do a much neater job!

Time to sandwich together the two halves of the cake!

Here I rolled out ready to roll fondant icing and laid it over the cake, smoothing it fown the sides and triming the excess (this is where I require most practice out of everything methinks! Its hard!!)

And, apart from adding the decorations on top (final pictures posted seperately here: http://imaeko.blogspot.com/2010/09/megs-first-cake-finished-thing.html) thats it!